There are two categories of ultra-luxury automobile. There are the cars that everyone recognises — the Bugatti Chiron, the Lamborghini Aventador, the Ferrari SF90. These are extraordinary machines. They are also, in the context of the world’s most serious collectors, the accessible end of the market.
And then there are the cars that require an explanation.
The Pagani Huayra. The Koenigsegg Jesko. The McLaren Senna — not the GT, the track variant. The Aston Martin Valkyrie. These are vehicles produced in numbers that make “limited edition” a comical understatement. The Jesko was limited to 125 units globally. The Valkyrie to 150. The Huayra Roadster BC to 40.
The principals who collect at this level are not buying performance. They are buying the furthest possible expression of what human engineering can achieve at a specific moment in time — objects that will not exist again and cannot be reproduced regardless of wealth.
Ronaldo’s collection, which includes both a Bugatti Chiron and a Pagani Zonda — the latter being a model that predates the Huayra and is now more valuable than it was at launch — reflects exactly this dual understanding. The famous car and the serious car. The statement and the study.
The ultra-luxury car market rewards the collector who understands the difference between what the market recognises and what the market will value in 30 years.
They are not always the same vehicle.
Curated by: Hype Luxury



